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Microcap & Penny Stocks : DGIV-A-HOLICS...FAMILY CHIT CHAT ONLY!! -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: paulmcg0 who wrote (38372)2/13/1999 2:36:00 PM
From: MARK C.  Respond to of 50264
 
I'll try and contain myself Paul.lol



To: paulmcg0 who wrote (38372)2/13/1999 3:21:00 PM
From: MARK C.  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 50264
 
Paul good morning, A music lesson on the origins of the music you enjoy. It is the child of MY GENERATION, a continuing progression of creativity that had it's origins before you were born. No offense intended.
Psychedelic rock emerged in the mid-'60s, as British Invasion and folk-rock badns began expanding the sonic possibilities of their music. Instead of confining themselves to the brief, concise verse-chorus-verse patterns of rock & roll, they moved toward more free-form, fluid song structures. Just as important -- if not more so -- the groups began incorporating elements of Indian and Eastern music and free-form jazz to their sound, as well as experimenting with electronically altering instruments and voices within the the recording studio. Initially, around 1965 and 1966, bands like the Yardbirds and the Byrds broke down the boundaries for psychedelia, creating swirling layers of fuzz-toned guitars, sitars, and chanted vocals. Soon, numerous groups followed their pattern, including the Beatles and the Rolling Stones, who both recorded psychedelia in 1966. In no time, groups on both sides of the Atlantic embraced the possibilities of the new genre and the differences were notable. In Britian, psychedeila tended to be whimsical and surrealistic. Nevertheless, bands -- most notably Pink Floyd and Traffic -- played extended instrumentals that relied on improvisation as much as their American contemporaries the Grateful Dead, the Doors, Love and Jefferson Airplane. In other corners of America, garage bands began playing psychedelic rock without abandoning their raw, amateurish foundation of three-chord rock -- they just layered in layers of distortion, feedback and effects. Eventually, psychedelic evolved into acid-rock, heavy metal and art-rock, but their continued to be revivals of psychedelia in the decades that followed, most notably in the American underground of the mid-'80s.
Related Styles: British Invasion Acid Rock Garage Rock Rock & Roll British Invasion R&B Electric British Blues Blues Rock Folk-Rock Paisley Underground Neo-Psychedelic Art-Rock/Progressive-Rock



To: paulmcg0 who wrote (38372)2/13/1999 3:23:00 PM
From: Jane4IceCream  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 50264
 
A friend gave me a few CD's yesterday.

I'm starting to listen to them in the background here while I do my research on the 'Net and do my housekeeping later.

I got Best Of The Raspberries, The Standells (Why Pick On Me), UFO (Phenomenon and Strangers In The Night), Status Quo (Piledriver), Patti Smith (Horses), and The New York Dolls.

Looks like I have some great music to listen too!!!

Have a great day Paul. How come Mr. D has Jimmy's home telephone number?? Things that make you go hummmmm!

Jane at the beach in shorts and a tee



To: paulmcg0 who wrote (38372)2/13/1999 3:30:00 PM
From: Midnightsun  Respond to of 50264
 
"Maybe I should
buy one of those black leather studded jockstraps that the Tubes' lead singer wore when
performing that song, to impress my girlfriend."

Judging from the content of your past statements, order size extra small.



To: paulmcg0 who wrote (38372)2/14/1999 8:08:00 PM
From: Kurt_Ruckus  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 50264
 
Paul, sounds like you've got a fortune in early LA punk records. You should sell them all and buy your favorite stock, DGIV.
Kurt